UH Involved in NSF Project That Will Help Shape Future Internets

June 20, 2012

The University of Houston has been selected as one of 10 universities
nationwide to be involved in the rollout of the Global Environment for
Network Innovations (GENI), a prestigious National Science Foundation
(NSF) project that will profoundly influence the future of networking.

UH's participation will enable research innovations that will shape
the technical infrastructure of future internets and their impact on
society. Other universities selected for participation include Clemson,
Duke, Georgia Tech, Northwestern, New York University and Princeton.

The hardware, scheduled for installation this month, has
state-of-the-art networking capabilities and computing resources that
will facilitate advanced research on network protocols. The single rack
IBM 1410 cluster will enable Open Resource Control Architecture (ORCA),
one of the leading GENI control frameworks to establish network
connectivity and reserve computing resources over the GENI national
infrastructure.

The installation of advanced networking capabilities will have a
substantial impact on the university's eligibility for funding to
conduct advanced experiments, expanding its competitiveness. Funding
entities increasingly look for a readily established cyber
infrastructure in addition to innovative research proposals.

Deniz Gurkan, associate professor of engineering technology,
spearheaded this effort. She is the only researcher in Texas to receive
GENI support to date. Her projects, in combination with the university's
technical infrastructure and Information Technology support,
demonstrated the prerequisite capabilities for hosting a GENI node at
UH. Gurkan's group plans to seek additional funding and contribute to
the next phase of the GENI project.

"Our contributions to the development of GENI infrastructure will
continue to grow. In addition, we are going to utilize GENI to propose
and test novel interoperability solutions affecting data exchange in
network measurements, and science and engineering data," Gurkan said.

Gurkan credits the existence of the advanced cyber infrastructure of
another UH-led project, the Research and Education Network of Houston
(RENoH), for providing a competitive advantage in the selection process.
RENoH was founded by Cullen University Chair and Texas Learning &
Computation Center (TLC2) director Lennart Johnsson,

The UH IT department played a primary role in bringing this effort to
fruition and will play an active role in future deployment efforts by
managing equipment at the UH site and providing support for future
innovation projects. The research experiments conducted by Gurkan and
other researchers will be shared with the broader GENI community and
help fuel the next phase of Internet development.